Orchestrate Administrator:
A PlateSpin Orchestrate Administrator deploys jobs, manages users, and monitors distributed computing resources. Administrators can also create and set policies for automating the usage of these computing resources. For more information about the Development Client tasks and tools used by the Orchestrate Administrator, see the PlateSpin Orchestrate 2.0 Administrator Reference.

User:
The end user of PlateSpin Orchestrate, also called a “Job Manager,” runs and manages jobs that have been created by a Job Developer and deployed by the administrator. It is also possible that the end user could be a developer who has created applications to run on distributed computing resources. For more information about the tasks and tools used by the Job Manager, see the PlateSpin Orchestrate 2.0 Server Portal Reference.

Job Developer:
The developer has control of a self-contained development system where he or she creates jobs and policies and tests them in a laboratory environment. When the jobs are tested and proven to function as intended, the developer delivers them to the PlateSpin Orchestrate administrator. For more information about the tasks and tools used by the Job Developer, see the PlateSpin Orchestrate 2.0 Developer Guide and Reference.

Prerequisite Skills

As data center managers or IT or operations administrators, it is assumed that users of the product have the following background:

General understanding of network operating environments and systems architecture.

Knowledge of basic UNIX* shell commands and text editors.

Feedback

We want to hear your comments and suggestions about this manual and the other documentation included with this product. Please use the User Comments feature at the bottom of each page of the online documentation, or go to www.novell.com/documentation/feedback.html and enter your comments there.

Additional Product Documentation

In addition to this Getting Started Reference, PlateSpin Orchestrate 2.0 includes the following additional guides that contain valuable information about the product:

Documentation Updates

This Getting Started Reference is updated periodically. To view the most recent version, visit the PlateSpin Orchestrate 2.0 Web site and look for the documentation updates section included at the end of the book.

Documentation Conventions

In Novell documentation, a greater-than symbol (>) is used to separate actions within a step and items in a cross-reference path.

When a single pathname can be written with a backslash for some platforms or a forward slash for other platforms, the pathname is presented with a backslash. Users of platforms that require a forward slash, such as Linux* or UNIX, should use forward slashes as required by your software.